Hombre de Acero wrote:Doughnuts.
(anyone still "long" Crispy Creme?........)
Dunk Donuts ROCKS!
(just don't tell anyone else!)
aschie30 wrote:Hombre de Acero wrote:Doughnuts.
(anyone still "long" Crispy Creme?........)
Dunk Donuts ROCKS!
(just don't tell anyone else!)
I find this kind of hilarious... but true. I went down to Old Fashioned Donuts last weekend, and I have to say, they reminded me exactly of Dunkin' Donuts, the kind carefully made in a small town, say, 20 years ago, when the fresh donuts were wheeled out 20 feet from the fryers to the shelves for sale. I think the dirty secret with donuts is that they have to be freshly made. That's it. (Disclaimer: There's a huge difference from what we currently have with Dunkin' Donuts, where they're made in bulk at sites unknown, haphazardly, hours before sale. Inedible.)
aschie30 wrote:I find this kind of hilarious... but true. I went down to Old Fashioned Donuts last weekend, and I have to say, they reminded me exactly of Dunkin' Donuts, the kind carefully made in a small town, say, 20 years ago, when the fresh donuts were wheeled out 20 feet from the fryers to the shelves for sale. I think the dirty secret with donuts is that they have to be freshly made. That's it. (Disclaimer: There's a huge difference from what we currently have with Dunkin' Donuts, where they're made in bulk at sites unknown, haphazardly, hours before sale. Inedible.)
David Hammond wrote:aschie30 wrote:I find this kind of hilarious... but true. I went down to Old Fashioned Donuts last weekend, and I have to say, they reminded me exactly of Dunkin' Donuts, the kind carefully made in a small town, say, 20 years ago, when the fresh donuts were wheeled out 20 feet from the fryers to the shelves for sale. I think the dirty secret with donuts is that they have to be freshly made. That's it. (Disclaimer: There's a huge difference from what we currently have with Dunkin' Donuts, where they're made in bulk at sites unknown, haphazardly, hours before sale. Inedible.)
I regularly stop in the Dunkin Donuts at the Rosemont Blue Line stop. I get only coffee, but I always ponder the possibility of a pastry. They never look very good, so I never get any. I did believe, though, that they were made on-site, because the last time I had a DD, they were. Now that you mention it, though, the inside of the place never smells like freshly fried dough.
BR wrote:I've just been learning about this (the central bakeries for DD) recently. Are there any DDs where they still make them on-site? If yes, any in the Chicago area?
David Hammond wrote:I regularly stop in the Dunkin Donuts at the Rosemont Blue Line stop. I get only coffee, but I always ponder the possibility of a pastry.
happy_stomach wrote:BR wrote:I've just been learning about this (the central bakeries for DD) recently. Are there any DDs where they still make them on-site? If yes, any in the Chicago area?
I am interested in this, too. BR: do you have any reading to recommend on the central bakeries? Just two weeks ago, I formed a brand new loyalty to Dunkin Donuts. Thanks to a very fortuitous sample from a DD truck in the wee hours of a recent, soppy Sunday, I've become a coffee drinker after swearing off the stuff for about 17 years--easily one of the most significant food/drink habit changes of my life.
Boston Business Journal wrote:The proposed 22,000-square-foot facility would serve about 50 Dunkin' Donuts stores located between Rt. 128 and Worcester, and would employ between 35 and 50 people, newspapers owned by Nashoba Publications reported.
...
Similar facilities exist in Brockton and Plainville.
The Providence Journal wrote:The company wants to be the first- or second-largest coffee shop chain in every market east of the river. It's creating Dunkin' Donuts hubs in Charlotte, N.C.; Nashville, Tenn.; Chicago and elsewhere.
...
As in the Northeast, new markets will have a central bakery providing some fresh goods to the shops and other goods will be baked in the stores.
BR wrote:I've just been learning about this (the central bakeries for DD) recently. Are there any DDs where they still make them on-site?
jbnewman wrote:BR wrote:I've just been learning about this (the central bakeries for DD) recently. Are there any DDs where they still make them on-site?
There are a few kosher DDs around. Outside of NYC, most (if not all) are producing on-site.
-jbn
BR wrote:jbnewman wrote:BR wrote:I've just been learning about this (the central bakeries for DD) recently. Are there any DDs where they still make them on-site?
There are a few kosher DDs around. Outside of NYC, most (if not all) are producing on-site.
I'm not sure what you're saying - are you saying that kosher DDs fry on-site? My understanding is that most of the DDs in the area are merely re-heating doughnuts that were fried and then frozen at a central bakery, as described in the linked to article above. If you are aware of specific locations where they are actually still frying the doughnuts, I'd love to hear.
David Hammond wrote:I never have a good answer for that question because on any given day or in any given mood my favorite restaurant could be fancy French or street-vended Mexican.
David Hammond wrote:Smurfs are snow cones (raspberry blue, I’m guessing) with Sprite added.
Attrill wrote:A few trends that come to mind, all mostly good:
Microbrews moving from bottles to cans, especially 16 oz. cans.
Attrill wrote:Breweries in Chicago in general. Metropolitan and Half Acre kicked it off, and Finch's is the latest. There are a few more getting ready to start selling soon.
happy_stomach wrote: Is Graham Elliot still serving it?
happy_stomach wrote:A few weeks ago, I went to a party that showcased a number of food trends: tea-infused cocktails, giant bowls of three different kinds of bacon (homestyle, praline and Szechuan pepper) and three kinds of flavored popcorn (curry, bourbon vanilla and I can't remember the third). It actually all worked quite well for party food.
toria wrote:speaking of pretzel rolls, I saw Pretzel croissants at trader joes the other day. I did not buy them but wonder what they are like.
LAZ wrote:On the other hand, if restaurants really are increasing their use of mason jars, that's possibly good news for home canners, because it well help keep the manufacturer in business.